The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, October 14, 2010 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS SIDNEY CENTER, N.Y. NY town drops plans to disrupt Muslim graves The lawyer for a Muslim com- munity in upstate New York says the local government is dropping plans to take legal action to force the Muslims to shut their tiny graveyard. Tom Schimmerling, lawyer for the 30-member Sufi community, said yesterday that he had just received a letter from a Sidney town attorney saying the town had decided not to act. Hans Hass, a spokesman for the Sufi Muslim community, says its members want an apology and a statement that the cemetery is legal. Hass has said anti-Islamic big- otry motivated a town board vote to try to shut down the cemetery. He said he has a zoning board docu- ment saying the cemetery is legal. Town Supervisor Bob McCarthy didn't immediately return a call Wednesday. He has previously said that the graveyard was illegal and bigotry had nothing to do with it. QUITO, Ecuador Ecuadorean police face sanctions after deadly revolt Ecuadorean police have opened internal disciplinary proceedings against 13 of their own officers who could be fired for their purported roles in a deadly revolt. Four colonels, seven captains, a lieutenant and a second lieuten- ant were placed on administrative leave as the first step in a process under which they could be dis- missed after 60 days, depending on the outcome of the investigation, a police statement said yesterday. One of the colonels is head of the congressional guard, some of whom are accused of assaulting lawmakers and blocking them from entering the capitol. About a dozen people died and 270 were wounded in the Sept. 30 uprising by police angry over a new law that would strip them of pro- motion bonuses. WASHINGTON. Feds clear FBI agents in shooting of Michigan imam FBI agents who raided a Michi- gan warehouse last year didn't violate federal civil rights laws when they fatally wounded and restrained a Muslim cleric, the Jus- tice Department announced yester- day. After completing its own investi- gation, the department's civil rights division said no further criminal investigation of the four FBI agents who shot Imam Luqman Ameen Abdullah or of the other agents in the raid is warranted. Four agents shot Abdullah 20 times as they tried to arrest him during a raid at a Dearborn, Mich., warehouse on Oct. 28, 2009. Abdullah, who led a Detroit mosque, was being sought as part of an ongoing stolen-goods sting operation. Federal authorities have described Abdullah as the leader of a radical Sunni group that aims to create an Islamic state within the U.S. Authorities say Abdullah preached hate for the government and encouraged followers to com- mit violence, especially against police and federal agents. MAIDUGURI, Nigeria Nigerian military heads to the north Soldiers armed with machine guns on Wednesday began secur- ing a northern Nigeria city, a day after a radical Islamic sect set a police station ablaze in what appeared to be an attempt to spark more violence in the trou- bled region. Police also said that the feared Boko Haram sect had planted unex- ploded bombs at a police station and a traffic roundabout the same time another burned down the police station. Tuesday's attack struck the same police station in Gamboru that was targeted last year, when rioting and a government crackdown left 700 dead. Meanwhile, authorities in Bauchi, the same city where the sect recently broke into a federal prison, worry that an attack on a police officer can be linked to the sect. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. II Miner Pablo Rojas gestures as workers remove his rescue equipment after being pulled out of the collapsed San Jose gold and copper mine where he had been trapped with 32 other miners for over two months near Copiapo, Chile. All 33 workers saved from Chilean mineIL Last worker lifted after 69 days underground SAN JOSE MINE, Chile (AP) - The last of the Chilean miners, the foreman who held them together when they were feared lost, was raised from the depths of the earth last night - a joyous end- ing to a 69-day ordeal that riveted the world. No one has ever been trapped so long and survived. Luis Urzua ascended smooth- ly through 2,000 feet of rock, completing a 221/-hour rescue operation that unfolded with remarkable speed and flawless execution. Before a crowd of about 2,000 people, he became the 33rd miner tobe rescued. The rescue workers who talked the men through the final hours still had to behoisted to the surface. When Urzua stepped out of the capsule, he hugged Chilean Presi- dent Sebastian Pinera and shook hands with him and said they had prevailed over difficult circum- stances. With the last miner by his side, the president led the crowd in singing the national anthem. One by one throughout the day, the men had emerged to the cheers of exuberant Chileans and before the eyes of a transfixed globe. The operation picked up speed as the day went on, but each miner was greeted with the same boisterous applause from rescuers. "Welcome to life," Pinera told Victor Segvia, the 15th miner out. On a day of superlatives, it seemed no overstatement. They rejoined a world intensely curious about their ordeal, and certain to offer fame and jobs. Previously unimaginable riches awaited men who had risked their lives going into the unstable gold and copper mine for about $1,600 a month. The miners made the smooth ascent inside a capsule called Phoenix - 13 feet tall, barely wider than their shoulders and painted in the white, blue and red of the Chilean flag. It had a door that stuck occasionally, and some wheels had to be replaced, but it worked exactly as planned. Beginning at midnight Tuesday, and sometimes as quickly as every 25 minutes, the pod was lowered the nearly half-mile to where 700,000 tons of rock collapsed Aug. 5 and entombed the men. Then, after a quick pep talk from rescue workers who had descended into the mine, a miner would strap himself in, make the journey upward and emerge from a manhole into the blinding sun. The rescue was planned with extreme care. The miners were monitored by video on the way up for any sign of panic. They had oxygen masks, dark glasses to protect their eyes from the unfa- miliar sunlight and sweaters for the jarring transition from sub- terranean swelter to chilly desert air. As they neared the surface, a camera attached to the top of the capsule showed a brilliant white piercing the darkness not unlike what accident survivors describe when they have near-death expe- riences. The miners emerged looking healthier than many had expect- ed and even clean-shaven. Sev- eral thrust their fists upwards like prizefighters, and Mario Sepul- veda, the second to taste freedom, bounded out and led his rescu- ers in a rousing cheer. Franklin Lobos, who played for the Chilean national soccer team in the 1980s, briefly bounced a soccer ball on his foot and knee. "We have prayed to San Loren- zo, the patron saint of miners, and to many other saints so that my brothers Florencio and Renan would come out of the mine all right. It is as if they had been born again," said Priscila Avalos. One of her brothers was the first miner rescued, and the other was due out later in the evening. Health Minister Jaime Mana- lich said some of the miners probably will be able to leave the hospital today - earlier than projected - but many had been unable to sleep, wanted to talk with families and were anxious. One was treated for pneumonia, and two needed dental work. "They are not ready to have a moment's rest until the last of their colleagues is out," he said. As it traveled down and up, down and up, the rescue capsule was not rotating as much inside the 2,041-foot escape shaft as offi- cials expected, allowing for faster trips. The first man out was Floren- cio Avalos, who emerged from the missile-like chamber and hugged his sobbing 7-year-old son, his wife and the Chilean president. No one in recorded history has survived as long trapped under- ground. For the first 17 days, no one even knew whether they were alive. In the weeks that followed, the world was captivated by their endurance and unity. Ahmadinejad lauds Iran's strength in Lebanon talk Iranian president says U.S. and Israeli presence in ME will soon diminish BEIRUT (AP) - Iran's presi- dent made a bold show of strength in Lebanon, vowing before thousands of Hezbollah supporters that U.S. and Israeli power in the Middle East will soon be eclipsed. The visit by Mahmoud Ahma- dinejad, welcomed by crowds of cheering Shiites, underscored the eroding position of pro- Western factions in Lebanon. More broadly, it suggested that the competition over influence in Lebanon may be tipping toward Iran and its ally Syria, away from the United States and it Arab allies Egypt and Saudi Arabia. "We seek a unified, modern Lebanon," said Ahmadinejad, whose country is the main patron of the Shiite Hezbollah militant group, the most powerful mili- tary force in Lebanon. "We will stand with the people and gov- ernment of Lebanon - and with all elements in the Lebanese nation - until they achieve all their goals." Ahmadinejad sought to depict his country as an ally of the entire nation, not just Hezbol- lah. Iran, whose ties to the group date back nearly 30 years, funds Hezbollah to the tune of millions of dollars a year and is believed to supply much of its arsenal. Hezbollah boasts widespread support among Shiites and virtu- ally runs a state-within-a-state in Shiite areas But Ahmadinejad's dramatic arrival only exacerbated fears among many Lebanese - particu- larly Sunnis and Christians - that Iran and Hezbollah are seeking to impose their will on the country and possibly pull Lebanon into a conflict with Israel. The United States and Israel criticized the visit, with White House spokesman Robert Gibbs saying Ahmadinejad is continu- ing his "provocative ways." "We reject any efforts to desta- bilize or inflame tensions within Lebanon," U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said. After meeting Lebanese Presi- dent Michel Suleiman and sign- ing a series of economic and commercial cooperation agree- ments, Ahmadinejad went to Hezbollah's stronghold in the Shiite district of south Beirut. Before a crowd of Hezbollah supporters, he gave a passionate speech denouncing the United States and Israel. He blamed Washington for the heated sectarian divisions in Leba- non and elsewhere in the Mideast, saying the United States sought to create strife "between people from different religions who coexisted for hundreds of years." He warned that the only way for Washington to keep its position in the region was to "end the domination of the Zionist regime." "The Zionist regime is sliding towards collapse, and no power is capable of saving it," he said. Allies of Lebanon's Western- backed, mainly Sunni coalition, which is led by Prime Minister Saad Hariri, showed their worry over Ahmadinejad's visit. A group of 250 politicians, lawyers and activists wrote an open letter to Ahmadinejad, crit- icizing his support of Hezbollah. "Your talk of 'changing the face of the region starting with Lebanon' and 'wiping Israel off the map through the force of the Islamic Resistance in Lebanon' ... makes it seem like your visit is that of a high commander to his front line," the letter said. In Tripoli, a mainly Sunni city in the north, posters have gone up in recent days showing Ahma- dinejad's face crossed out, above the words: "No welcome to the rule of clerics." Thousands of Hezbollah sup- porters lined the highway from the airport into Beirut, waving Lebanese and Iranian flags for Ahmadinejad's arrival. Trailed by heavily armed security in bulletproof vests, Ahmadine- jad smiled and waved from the sunroof of his black SUV as he passed, and the crowd threw flowers and sweets at his motor- cade.